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SSII > Etude de marché sectorielle
 China's and India's bids to become R&D powerhouses
€ 2 000,00
Editeur :
Ovum
Langue :
Anglais
Date de publication :
Mai 2008
Taille du document :
29
Autres informations :
Description , Table des matières
 
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Présentation de l'étude de marché - Description & Table des matières
 China's and India's bids to become R&D powerhouses

China and India have both established themselves as world-class competitors – not to speak of exporters – in important segments of the global economy: China in manufacturing and India in services. Both countries have climbed rapidly up the value chain in these fields. China, for example, has progressed from textiles and footwear into a huge range of technology-based products, which now account for almost one-third of the country’s total exports. India, meanwhile, has evolved from maintaining legacy computer code and doing the grunt work required with Y2K compliance into a premier source of leading-edge SOA application development and business process optimization and outsourcing.

Both countries will compete increasingly with each other – and with dozens of other developed and emerging countries – to become the high-tech R&D and manufacturing back offices to the world. Both, however, recognize the need to go much further than to support the needs of Western corporations. Both are also taking big steps toward developing their own global high-tech companies and their own global high-tech brands.


 

Table of contents

Key messages

India and China’s move up the economic value chain

Initial inroads
Altering the competitive map
New horizons
R&D as the next target

China and India’s entry into high-tech R&D services

Ancient history
Reawakenings
Rapidly expanding capabilities
Reasons for investment

R&D growth drivers and inhibitors

Market growth potential
Number of qualified people
R&D quality
Government policies
IP protection
University collaboration

Funding Chinese and Indian innovation

The need for entrepreneurs
Flood of foreign capital
The role of domestic funding

China’s and India’s comparative advantages

Comparative summary
China’s infrastructure advantages
English as India’s ace
The trouble with governments
Educational landmines

India’s and China’s value-added challenges

Upgrading India’s image
The value in China’s value-add
Defining high-tech

External economic challenges

Challenges from above
Challenges from below
Raw material challenges

The ‘Chindia’ solution

The risk of single-leg growth foundations
The benefits of joining forces
A boom in Sino-Indian trade

R&D as a necessary – but not sufficient – step into a value-added future

The foundation for the next evolution of industry


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